According to the presentation, increasing fiber may be the wrong approach—when the root issue is how the body processes and moves waste.
Digestive changes usually don’t happen overnight. For most people, it starts with small moments that are easy to explain away — blaming a busy routine, “something you ate,” stress, age… or assuming it’s “normal to get backed up sometimes.”
For some, it comes with on-and-off discomfort: a heavy feeling, bloating, gas, or that sense your gut never fully empties. Others notice their rhythm shifts over time — and even when they’re trying to “do everything right,” their body doesn’t respond the way it used to.
Because these signs can vary from day to day, it’s easy to ignore them… but the presentation suggests there may be a more organized explanation behind it — and a simple daily support path — especially when the body starts compacting waste and “flow” isn’t moving the way it should.
Take a moment and check honestly: have you noticed any of these?
What the presentation highlights: in some cases, the issue may be linked to the gut-liver axis and bile flow, which can lead to drier, more compacted waste — triggering what they call the “transcon compactor mechanism.”
It all started with small signs: I went more than two days without a bowel movement, my stomach felt bloated, and I had that lingering feeling of “never fully emptying.” I caught myself trying to compensate—more water, more fiber, teas, magnesium… then moving on as if it were normal.
One night, scrolling on my phone, I came across a documentary. In it, researchers from renowned universities explained that it isn’t always “just constipation”: there can be a silent process that dries out and compacts waste, forming what they call a fecalith (“stone poop syndrome”)—and in that situation, fiber, laxatives, and even magnesium may not address the root.
They then introduced a simple warm-water morning protocol (“Instant Colon Release Method”), designed to support the gut-liver axis, promote bile flow, and reduce the compaction effect they describe as the “transcon compactor mechanism”—and, according to the material’s own logic, over the following weeks I started to feel my digestion “unsticking” and returning to a much more predictable, almost “clockwork” rhythm.
The story of Linda Carver reflects a common frustration: a bloated belly, clothes feeling tighter, and the sense that nothing ever fully “empties.” may affect delicate eye structures and weaken the body’s natural “repair” capacity.
That’s why the simple warm-water morning protocol shown in the presentation has been getting so much attention. It’s presented as a practical daily method to support regularity by working with the gut-liver axis and bile flow — without complicated routines.
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